Racial Violence Rocks Midwest State Fair

MILWAUKEE - Wisconsin State Fair officials imposed heightened security measures after racial fighting between groups of youths on and around the midway and attacks on police officers resulted in 24 arrests.

The violence began with fights between groups of African-American youths at the fair, located between Milwaukee and the suburb of West Allis, fair officials said.

Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn said the fighting later degenerated into what he described as racially charged violence outside the fair, when the youths fought with white motorists stuck in traffic.

James Hall, the head of the Milwaukee chapter of the NAACP, said the incident was troubling and that its root causes needed to be addressed within the black community.

Milwaukee, a city segregated largely along racial lines, has seen heightened racial tensions this summer with the occurrence of other similar incidents.

"We need to nip this in the bud, or it's going to escalate into something much, much worse," said Ralph Hollmon, President of the Milwaukee Urban League. "We cannot allow this to divide our community along racial lines."

"This was reprehensible, violent behavior, for which there is no excuse," Flynn said, adding that "some people were singled out for violence because of their race."

Flynn offered no further details on what may have sparked the initial fighting or the later violence.

Fair spokeswoman Patrice Harris said four people were hurt outside the fair grounds.

Seven officers were also wounded in the violence, and two were hospitalized from blows to the head.

Wisconsin State Police were working with State Fair police and West Allis authorities to ensure order for the remaining days of the event, fair officials said.

Fair officials said the youths involved in the fighting appeared to be at the fair to cause trouble, rather than to go on rides or participate in similar activities.